Walrus hitting mainnet feels like one of those infrastructure changes you don’t celebrate until you notice what it removes. A lot of Web3 apps still treat storage like a separate, awkward problem: push files somewhere else, then hope permissions, access, and cleanup don’t get messy over time. Walrus tightens that loop by making stored blobs something apps can handle with onchain rules, including the very human need to delete things later instead of turning everything into permanent clutter. The timing also explains why it’s back in conversations. People are done with toy examples. They want proof this works with real, chaotic archives, not just neat developer demos. Team Liquid moving more than 250TB of footage and media onto Walrus is a practical signal, not a slogan. If programmable storage holds up under that kind of weight, what suddenly becomes feasible for identity, gaming, or AI when the data layer is verifiable but still controllable?

@Walrus 🦭/acc #walrus $WAL #Walrus